

Type of Document Dissertation Author Sinclair, Andrea L. Author's Email Address asinclair@vt.edu URN etd-05092003-090738 Title Disentangling Contributions of Process Elements to the Fair Process Effect: A Policy-Capturing Approach Degree PhD Department Psychology Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title Hauenstein, Neil M. A. Committee Chair Carlson, Kevin D. Committee Member Donovan, John J. Committee Member Foti, Roseanne J. Committee Member Muffo, John A. Committee Member Keywords
- organizational justice
- fair process effect
Date of Defense 2003-05-05 Availability unrestricted Abstract Recent research on organizational justice suggests3 elements of process-related justice: procedural,
interpersonal, and informational justice. Early
research on the fair process effect indicates that
fair procedures in general can help to ameliorate
the effects of negative outcomes. This study
examined the relative importance of each specific
process element in accounting for the fair
process effect. In addition, this study examined
whether there are substitutable effects among the
process elements such that high fairness on one
element substitutes for low fairness on another
element. Administrative Assistants working at a
university read 48 hypothetical profiles
describing a supervisor's procedural,interpersonal
and informational justice behaviors in handling a
negative job-related outcome. Administrative
Assistants provided overall judgments of the
fairness of the situation. The policy capturing
analysis indicated that the weights given to the
fairness cues varied somewhat across individuals.
Hierarchical cluster analysis indicated that
participants' fairness policies could be grouped
into 3 homogenous clusters: two "main effects
clusters" and an "interaction cluster." The first
main effects cluster equally weighted procedural,
interpersonal and informational justice in their
overall fairness evaluations. The second main
effects cluster favored procedural justice over
the other two forms of justice. Finally,
participants in the interaction cluster utilized
the three two-way interactions between the forms
of justice. Between-subject analyses indicated
that the available demographic and background
variables were not related to the judges'
policies. Research and practical implications
are discussed.
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